I did this repair on my boat. I took a circular saw to the cabin floor to cut a 
bigger opening to work in. It is now covered with teak and holly flooring.
Take this advice before starting - make a jig and take photos to make SURE you 
get the mast step back in the exact same place and at the same height! If you 
end up higher, you can always saw a bit of mast off, but ending up lower is a 
bit more of a mess.
Here was my order of operations:
Mast out
Cut floor
Spend some quality time with a saw, hammer, and chisel getting all the rotten 
wood out.
Analyze the mast step area.
Find out the original design was really stupid. The boat has a flat shelf on 
either side of the bilge. The original design was a piece of wood spanning the 
bilge sump with a layer of fiberglass on top of it. The aluminum mast step was 
barely wider than the mast and was mounted on the wood/fiberglass over the 
bilge sump A *hole* was drilled through it all to drain water and make SURE 
there was a way for water to get into the wood. The whole assembly was like a 
bridge with support at the ends and weight in the center. As the wood rots the 
mast slowly sinks into the bilge.
Next step was design the replacement. This was 21 years ago, so my memory is a 
bit fuzzy, but I think I used two pieces of 3/4" marine plywood epoxied 
together. The mast step is welded onto a 1/2" (I think??) aluminum plate as 
wide as the entire wood mast step, NOT just a bit wider than the mast. The 
weight of the mast is distributed to the bilge shelf on either side of the boat 
so there is no force bending the wood. 
This has held up for over two decades now. I am sure I could do better if I was 
doing it today and YMMV
Joe Della Barba
Coquina
C&C 35 MK I

-----Original Message-----
From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Neil 
Gallagher via CnC-List
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2018 12:30 AM
To: Wolfgang Svec via CnC-List
Cc: Neil Gallagher
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Stus-List Mast Step Rebuild C&C 35MK1

Hi Wolf,

This is a pretty common problem on 35-1's.  The original support for the step 
is about 4 or 5 layers of plywood spanning the bilge well, wrapped in a very 
thin layer of fiberglass. The glass cracks and the wood starts to rot and sag 
under the mast load.

You're on to the issue: access under the cabin sole.  Various owners have taken 
different approaches, but my method was to cut the old wood with a sawzall to 
get it out of opening.  Putting something back in varies, some people use wood 
covered with epoxy, I used pieces of fiberglass board (from McMaster Carr) to 
build up layers and glassed over the whole thing.  The trick is to  shape and 
fit wide boards down through the narrower opening in the cabin sole. You're 
working down in a hole so it's a bit uncomfortable, but all doable with basic 
skills.

Here's some photos:

https://photos.app.goo.gl/0i3sVe9NIlmXT5kn2

Neil Gallagher
Weatherly 35-1
Glen Cove, NY

On 4/12/2018 10:19 PM, Wolfgang Svec via CnC-List wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> Ive been working on a c&c 35mk1 and yesterday found some rot in the 
> mast step board. The boat hasn’t been used for a while and some water 
> has been sitting in the bilge. It doesn’t look like there is good 
> access even once the mast is off and im wondering if anyone has 
> tackled rebuilding their mast step before in the 35’ - preferably with 
> pictures :)
>
> Thanks.
> wolf
>


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